Arsenal took the lead through Hulme, and doubled their advantage before half-time when Jack scored. Sheffield Wednesday scored a consolation goal when Burgess converted a penalty awarded for a Jack handball, and the match ended 2–1.[1]

1.
Arsenal F.C.
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Arsenal Football Club is a professional football club based in Highbury, London, that plays in the Premier League, the top flight of English football. The club has won 13 League titles,12 FA Cups, Arsenal was the first club from the South of England to join The Football League, in 1893. They entered the First Division in 1904, and have accumulated the second most points. Relegated only once, in 1913, they continue the longest streak in the top division, in the 1930s, Arsenal won five League Championships and two FA Cups, and another FA Cup and two Championships after the war. In 1970–71, they won their first League and FA Cup Double, between 1989 and 2005, they won five League titles and five FA Cups, including two more Doubles. They completed the 20th century with the highest average league position, Herbert Chapman won Arsenals first national trophies, but died prematurely. He helped introduce the WM formation, floodlights, and shirt numbers, Arsène Wenger has been the longest-serving manager and has won the most trophies. His teams set several English records, the longest win streak, the longest unbeaten run, in 1886, Woolwich munitions workers founded the club as Dial Square. In 1913, the crossed the city to Arsenal Stadium in Highbury. They became Tottenham Hotspurs nearest club, commencing the North London derby, in 2006, they moved down the road to the Emirates Stadium. Arsenal earned €435. 5m in 2014–15, with the Emirates Stadium generating the highest revenue in world football, based on social media activity from 2014–15, Arsenals fanbase is the fifth largest in the world. In 2016, Forbes estimated the club was the second most valuable in England, on 1 December 1886, munitions workers in Woolwich, now South East London, formed Arsenal as Dial Square, with David Danskin as their first captain. Named after the heart of the Royal Arsenal complex, they took the name of the complex a month later. Royal Arsenal F. C. s first home was Plumstead Common, though spent most of their time in South East London playing on the other side of Plumstead. Royal Arsenal won Arsenals first trophies in 1890 and 1891, Royal Arsenal renamed themselves for a second time upon becoming a limited liability company in 1893. They registered their new name, Woolwich Arsenal, with The Football League when the club ascended later that year, Woolwich Arsenal was the first southern member of The Football League, starting out in the Second Division and winning promotion to the First Division in 1904. Falling attendances, due to financial difficulties among the munitions workers, businessmen Henry Norris and William Hall took the club over, and sought to move them elsewhere. In 1913, soon after relegation back to the Second Division, Woolwich Arsenal moved to the new Arsenal Stadium in Highbury and this saw their third change of name, the following year, they reduced Woolwich Arsenal to simply The Arsenal

2.
Sheffield Wednesday F.C.
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Sheffield Wednesday Football Club is a professional association football club based in Sheffield, England. The team competes in the Championship, the tier of the English football league system. Formed as an offshoot of The Wednesday Cricket Club in 1867, in 1868 they won the Cromwell Cup, only the second tournament of its kind, and in 1877 they won the inaugural Sheffield Challenge Cup, the oldest county cup in England. They were founding members and inaugural champions of the Football Alliance in 1889, in 1992 they became founder members of the Premier League. The club has spent most of its history in English footballs top flight. The Owls, as they are nicknamed, have won four league titles, Wednesday have also competed in UEFA cup competitions on four occasions, reaching the quarter-finals of the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup in 1963. Since 1899 the club has played its matches at Hillsborough stadium. Although no contemporary evidence has found to support the claim. Nevertheless, an 1842 article in Bells Life magazine states the club was founded as far back as 1816, the club was so named because it was on Wednesdays that the founding members had their day off work. They were initially based at the New Ground in Darnall, and often went by the name of Darnall Wednesday, in 1855 they were one of six clubs that helped build Bramall Lane, and held a wicket there for many years. The proposal proved very popular, with over 60 members signing up for the new team on the first night and they played their first match against The Mechanics on 19 October the same year, winning by three goals and four rouges to nil. On 1 February 1868, Wednesday played their first competitive match as they entered the Cromwell Cup. A week after their semi-final, they went on to win the cup, beating the Garrick club in the final after extra time, a key figure during the formative years of the football club was Charles Clegg, who joined the Wednesday in 1867. His relationship with the club lasted for the rest of his life and he also became president and chairman of the Football Association, and was known as the Napoleon of Football. In 1876 Wednesday acquired Scot James Lang, although he was not employed by the club, he was given a job by a member of the Sheffield Wednesday board that had no formal duties. He is now acknowledged as the first professional player in England. With Lang in their team the club became one of the strongest in the region. In 1880 the club entered the FA Cup for the first time, but although they had had Lang on their books a decade earlier, the club officially remained staunchly amateur, and this stance almost cost the club its very existence

3.
Stamford Bridge (stadium)
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Stamford Bridge is a football stadium located in Fulham, London. It is the ground of Chelsea F. C. The stadium is located within the Moore Park Estate also known as Walham Green and is referred to as simply The Bridge. The capacity is 41,663, making it the eighth largest ground in the Premier League, the club has plans to expand the capacity to 60,000 by the 2021–2022 season. It has undergone major changes over the years, most recently in the 1990s when it was renovated into a modern. Stamford Bridge has been used as a venue for England international matches, FA Cup Finals, FA Cup semi-finals and it has also hosted numerous other sports, such as cricket, rugby union, speedway, greyhound racing, baseball and American football. The stadiums highest official attendance is 82,905, for a match between Chelsea and Arsenal on 12 October 1935. Stamford Bridge is considered to be a derivative of Samfordesbrigge meaning the bridge at the sandy ford, 18th century maps show a Stanford Creek running along the route of what is now a railway line at the back of the East Stand as a tributary of the Thames. The upper reaches of this tributary have been known as Billingswell Ditch, Pools Creek, in mediaeval times the Creek was known as Billingwell Dyche, derived from Billings spring or stream. It formed the boundary between the parishes of Kensington and Fulham, by the 18th century the creek had become known as Counters Creek which is the name it has retained since. However, previous to this, in 1898, Stamford Bridge played host to the World Championship of shinty between Beauly Shinty Club and London Camanachd. Stamford Bridge was built close to Lillie Bridge, a sports ground which had hosted the 1873 FA Cup Final. It was initially offered to Fulham Football Club, but they turned it down for financial reasons. After considering the sale of the land to the Great Western Railway Company, noted football ground architect Archibald Leitch, who had also designed Ibrox, Celtic Park, Craven Cottage and Hampden Park, was hired to construct the stadium. In its early days, Stamford Bridge stadium was served by a railway station, Chelsea and Fulham railway station. Stamford Bridge had a capacity of around 100,000. It was used as the FA Cup final venue, as originally constructed, Stamford Bridge was an athletics track and the pitch was initially located in the middle of the running track. The stadium had a stand for 5,000 spectators on the east side

4.
FA Community Shield
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The Football Association Community Shield is English footballs annual match contested between the champions of the previous Premier League season and the holders of the FA Cup at Wembley Stadium. If the Premier League champions also won the FA Cup then the league runners-up provide the opposition, generally ranked below the FA Cup and League Cup in terms of importance, the fixture is a recognised football super cup. Organised by the Football Association, proceeds from the game are distributed to community-based initiatives and charities around the country, the fixture was first played in the 1908–09 season, replacing the Sheriff of London Charity Shield. The current holders are Manchester United who defeated Leicester City in the 2016 match, the Community Shield evolved from the Sheriff of London Charity Shield that had been introduced in 1898 as a professionals versus amateurs cup. The Football Association Charity Shield, as it was known at the time, was designed to replace the Sheriff of London Charity Shield after the amateur clubs fell out with the FA. The new format was to have the Football League First Division champions play the Southern League champions, the match was drawn 1–1, so the game was replayed when Manchester United won 4–0. This is the only Charity Shield game to go to a replay, both games were played at Stamford Bridge. In 1930 the Football League winner v. FA Cup winner returned, and with a few exceptions, the game had been moved to the start of the season from 1959 onwards. The question of two teams should contest the Shield should one team win both the FA Cup and League continued to linger. In 1971, Arsenal became the team to win the Double since the Shields foundation. Leicester City were invited as Division Two champions to play FA Cup runners-up Liverpool instead and went on to win the trophy, despite finishing the season eleventh, City also contested the 1973 Charity Shield but lost 1-0 to Second Division champions Burnley. In 1974 the then FA secretary, Ted Croker, created the current format with the match being played at Wembley Stadium, and being contested by the reigning League and FA Cup holders. Four drawn games in the 1980s and early 1990s resulted in each holding the trophy for 6 months. With the formation of a new top league, the FA Premier League, as a result, the competition was renamed the Community Shield. Arsenal were the first winners of the renamed Community Shield with a 1–0 victory over Liverpool, the auction was held at The Royal Garden Hotel in Kensington, where the England team celebrated the 1966 victory. The Bobby Moore Fund became the FAs new charity partner in July 2016, an official honour in the English game, the Community Shield is regarded to be the first competitive game of the new English football season. However, it has been considered by some to be a minor trophy, the game has been described by some media sources, including Mark Lawrenson, as a glorified friendly. On the other hand, many media, clubs and players continue to recognise the importance of the match as the first official game and trophy of the domestic season

5.
Association football
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Association football, more commonly known as football or soccer, is a team sport played between two teams of eleven players with a spherical ball. It is played by 250 million players in over 200 countries and dependencies making it the worlds most popular sport, the game is played on a rectangular field with a goal at each end. The object of the game is to score by getting the ball into the opposing goal, players are not allowed to touch the ball with their hands or arms while it is in play, unless they are goalkeepers. Other players mainly use their feet to strike or pass the ball, the team that scores the most goals by the end of the match wins. If the score is level at the end of the game, the Laws of the Game were originally codified in England by The Football Association in 1863. Association football is governed internationally by the International Federation of Association Football, the first written reference to the inflated ball used in the game was in the mid-14th century, Þe heued fro þe body went, Als it were a foteballe. The Online Etymology Dictionary states that the word soccer was split off in 1863, according to Partha Mazumdar, the term soccer originated in England, first appearing in the 1880s as an Oxford -er abbreviation of the word association. Within the English-speaking world, association football is now usually called football in the United Kingdom and mainly soccer in Canada and the United States. People in Australia, Ireland, South Africa and New Zealand use either or both terms, although national associations in Australia and New Zealand now primarily use football for the formal name. According to FIFA, the Chinese competitive game cuju is the earliest form of football for which there is scientific evidence, cuju players could use any part of the body apart from hands and the intent was kicking a ball through an opening into a net. It was remarkably similar to football, though similarities to rugby occurred. During the Han Dynasty, cuju games were standardised and rules were established, phaininda and episkyros were Greek ball games. An image of an episkyros player depicted in low relief on a vase at the National Archaeological Museum of Athens appears on the UEFA European Championship Cup, athenaeus, writing in 228 AD, referenced the Roman ball game harpastum. Phaininda, episkyros and harpastum were played involving hands and violence and they all appear to have resembled rugby football, wrestling and volleyball more than what is recognizable as modern football. As with pre-codified mob football, the antecedent of all football codes. Non-competitive games included kemari in Japan, chuk-guk in Korea and woggabaliri in Australia, Association football in itself does not have a classical history. Notwithstanding any similarities to other games played around the world FIFA have recognised that no historical connection exists with any game played in antiquity outside Europe. The modern rules of football are based on the mid-19th century efforts to standardise the widely varying forms of football played in the public schools of England

6.
Gerrit Keizer
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Gerard Pieter Keizer, also known as Gerard Keyser, was a Dutch football goalkeeper. As well as being successful in his native country playing with AFC Ajax, he was also the original Flying Dutchman at Arsenal. Keizer joined Ajax Amsterdam at the age of 16, and two later made his debut for the side, against Stormvogels on April 1,1929. For the first few years of his career he deputised for Ajaxs No.1 Jan de Boer, Keizer then first played as an amateur for Kent side Margate. At the time Margate acted as a club of sorts for London giants Arsenal. Keizer was immediately pitched into the Arsenal first team, and played in Arsenals first twelve First Division matches of the 1930-31 season and he also played in the Gunners Charity Shield victory over Sheffield Wednesday that season. Keizers playing style was distinctly flamboyant, to the point of erratic and he left Arsenal in July 1931 for Charlton Athletic, and later played for Queens Park Rangers as an amateur. He finally returned to Amsterdam in 1933, and became Ajaxs number one for the fifteen years, he played 302 matches for the club. After the war, Ajax were in financial trouble and could not even afford their own kit. Keizer flew to London to ask his old club Arsenal for any help, Ajax thus played their first matches after the war in Arsenals red and white shirts, rather than their own. Afterward, Keizer got into business and went on to one of Amsterdams leading greengrocers. In 1955 he returned to Ajax, this time as a member of the clubs board, gerrit Keizer profile and stats at Wereld van Oranje

7.
Jimmy Seed
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James Marshall Jimmy Seed was an English footballer and football manager. Despite being born in Blackhill, Seed was brought up in the village of Whitburn on the coast just to the north of Sunderland, the family moving when Jimmy was only two years old. After scoring over 80 goals for Whitburn Jimmy had unsuccessful trials at South Shields, however Sunderland manager Bob Kyle decided to give Seed a second chance this time playing him at inside right instead of centre forward in a North Eastern League match against Wallsend. Seed scored a hat-trick in the match and was signed by Sunderland as a professional in April 1914. Seed spent the 1914–15 season playing in Sunderland reserves, he scored plenty of goals as the team lifted the Durham Senior Cup, official League football was suspended at the end of that season because of the outbreak of World War I. The 20-year-old Seed joined the 8th battalion of the West Yorkshire Regiment and was drafted to France, in the last months of the war he was gassed and returned to England to convalesce. With the cessation of hostilities, Seed played a Victory League match for Sunderland against Durham City in 1918, on the strength of that performance the Sunderland directors decided that Seeds wartime experience had finished him as a footballer and gave him a free transfer. Seed never played an official first team game for Sunderland, Seeds football career was rescued by Haydn Price, the manager of Welsh non-League team Mid Rhondda who were based in the town of Tonypandy. Price offered Seed a chance to play for the South Wales club which was accepted, Seed played five games in the remainder of the 1919–20 season, scoring two goals as Spurs ran away with the Division Two title. Seed was an ever present for Spurs in the following seven seasons in Division One. The 1920–21 season saw Tottenham lift the FA Cup with Seed playing in all six matches in the cup run, 1921–22 saw Tottenham finish runners up to Liverpool in Division One with Seed scoring 10 goals in 36 appearances. In February 1927 Peter McWilliam resigned as Spurs manager, being replaced by Billy Minter, Minter obviously thought the 32-year-old Seed was reaching the end of his career with a young Taffy OCallaghan ready to take his place, he promptly cut Seeds wages from £8 to £7 a week. Seed made his Wednesday debut on 27 August 1927 in the first match of the 1927–28 season against Everton, during the first part of the season Seed was asked to play in numerous different positions by manager Bob Brown as Wednesday struggled in Division One. By mid March 1928 they had won six matches out of 32 and were seven points adrift at the foot of the table. At that stage Seed was made team captain with existing skipper Fred Keen being dropped, Ellis Rimmer was bought from Tranmere Rovers, Wednesday picked up 17 points out of a possible 20 in the last ten matches and avoided relegation by a point. The irony was that it was Seeds old club Tottenham who were relegated on the day of the season. He played in Sheffield Wednesdays 2–1 defeat by Arsenal in the Charity Shield at Stamford Bridge in October 1930 and he played for the Professionals in the 1929 FA Charity Shield. Seed began his career at Clapton Orient

8.
Harry Burgess (footballer)
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Harry Burgess was an English footballer who played at Inside-left for Stockport County, Sheffield Wednesday where he won the league championship in 1929–30, and Chelsea. He won four caps for England scoring four goals, Harry was born in Alderley Edge, Cheshire and played for Alderley Edge and Wilmslow Albion before appearing for Sandbach Ramblers in the Cheshire County League. In 1925 he signed for Stockport County making his debut on 13 March 1926 in the 4–0 defeat at Hull City and he made two more appearances in the 1925–26 season in which County were relegated from the Second Division. Harry finished the season on loan at Sandbach Ramblers but returned to Stockport ready for the 1926–27 season, the Hatters were playing in Third Division for the second time but unlike 1921–22 they could not bounce back and finished sixth in a season that Burgess flourished. The following season County finished third with Harry scoring a dozen, adding Harry to the team wasnt the only change The Wednesday made in the summer of 1929 with the 1929–30 season being the first with their new name Sheffield Wednesday. Burgess joined a team of players under their manager Bob Brown. He scored twice in a 5–1 England win, a match in three other Wednesday players appeared Ernie Blenkinsop, Alf Strange and Tony Leach. This is one of the two occasions to date that Wednesday have had four players in the England team and he made three further appearances for the Three Lions during the season scoring another two goals. That season Wednesday were again challenging for the First Division title this time against Arsenal under their great manager Herbert Chapman and he played in Sheffield Wednesdays 2–1 defeat by Arsenal in the Charity Shield at Stamford Bridge in October 1930. Wednesday flew out of the blocks in the 1931–32 season but a slump at the start of 1932 left them as low as 10th position and it took a tremendous seven wins from the final ten matches of the season for them to finish third for the second successive season. In 1932–33 Wednesday were back in a race, again with Arsenal. Unfortunately injuries and suspensions tok their toll in the end and despite all their promise, halfway through 1934–35 Harry, by now a fans favourite, was transferred to Chelsea much to the chagrin of the Wednesday faithful. Harry had scored 77 goals in 234 matches during five years in Sheffield. Player profile at stockportcounty. co. uk International career at englandstats. com

9.
Ellis Rimmer
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Ellis Rimmer was a professional footballer who played for Tranmere Rovers, Sheffield Wednesday and Ipswich Town. He was a winger who was quite tall and scored his fair share of headed goals. His career lasted from 1924 until 1939 during which time he played 447 league games, scoring 142 goals and he was also a talented musician and often played piano at public appearances. Rimmer was born in Birkenhead on 2 January 1907, he played as an amateur for Parkside, Northern Nomads, in his three seasons with Tranmere, Rimmer played briefly with football legends Dixie Dean and Tom Pongo Waring, making 62 league appearances and scoring 20 goals. His good form alerted other clubs and in February 1928 he was signed by Sheffield Wednesday manager Bob Brown for a fee of £3,000, Sheffield Wednesday were in a grave situation when Rimmer signed for them, they were seven points adrift at the foot of Division One. He played in Sheffield Wednesdays 2–1 defeat by Arsenal in the Charity Shield at Stamford Bridge in October 1930, in April 1930 he was called up by England for his first international cap, scoring twice in a 5–2 victory over Scotland in the 1930 British Home Championship. Three other Wednesday players Bill Marsden, Alf Strange and Ernie Blenkinsop all played in that match, Rimmer played a further three international matches, his last being just before his 25th birthday in December 1931 against Spain. The first two seasons of the 1930s saw Rimmer net 24 and 23 goals respectively, an excellent effort for a winger whose main job was to provide chances for other players. The 1934–35 season was probably his most memorable as Wednesday lifted the FA Cup with Rimmer netting two goals in the final against West Bromwich Albion. He scored eight FA Cup goals in total that season and achieved the feat of scoring in every round. He also scored 18 league goals to him a best ever season tally of 26. He continued to be a regular for Wednesday until March 1938 when Bill Fallon took his place on the left wing, in his 10-year career with Sheffield Wednesday, Rimmer played 418 games in all competitions, scoring 140 goals. Rimmer was transferred to Division Three South team Ipswich Town in August 1938 and he only made four appearances for Ipswich before deciding to retire in January 1939 after playing his last match against Northampton Town in a Southern Section Cup tie. After retirement Rimmer ran The Hallamshire House, a house in Sheffield and then in Formby. He died in Formby on 16 March 1965, aged 58, Sheffield Wednesday Football League First Division winner 1928–29, 1929–30 FA Cup winner,1935 Charity Shield winner 1935

10.
1908 FA Charity Shield
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The 1908 FA Charity Shield was the first Charity Shield, a football match contested by the winners of the previous seasons Football League and Southern League competitions. The new match was arranged to take place at Chelsea F. C. s home ground. Following the conclusion of the leagues, 1907–08 Football League winners Manchester United were scheduled to play against 1907–08 Southern League champions Queens Park Rangers. The first match was played on a damp pitch in poor weather. Following the match it was thought that the two sides would share the honours, but instead at the suggestion of Arthur Kinnaird, 11th Lord Kinnaird and it was once again played at Stamford Bridge and the two teams fielded most of the same players with only a few exceptions. On this occasion the weather was far improved and the attendance by spectators was far higher with 50,000 fans attending, Manchester United won the game by four goals, and between the two matches more than £1000 was raised for charity. The Charity Shield was originally designed to be a game between professionals and amateurs and it had evolved from the Sheriff of London Charity Shield, a similar earlier competition which also pitted an amateur club versus a professional one. In response the FA told all their clubs to refuse to compete in the match and not allow the organisation to use their facilities for it either. This was as a result of the formation of the Amateur Football Association the previous year, an informal discussion between the organisers and the FA took place on 10 February, but they couldnt come to an agreement. In protest the organisers of the Sheriff of London Charity Shield wrote a letter to Arthur Balfour, the leader of the Conservative Party. Balfour wrote back publicly to say that he was unhappy about the situation and it was subsequently announced in mid April that the match had been cancelled for the year. It was proposed to play at the game at Stamford Bridge, home of Chelsea F. C. on 2 May, a week prior to the scheduled match, Queens Park Rangers were named the winners of the Southern League, qualifying them for the game. Around the same time, Manchester United won the Football League and this meant that Manchester United were due to play Queens Park Rangers for the first FA Charity Shield. Both clubs agreed to part in the match without charging any expenses. The rain prior to the match had made the pitch quite boggy, Manchester United were initially surprised by the abilities of the Queens Park Rangers players, in particular the two full backs. They had the majority of the play and in the eleventh minute Alfred Gittins. He dribbled it towards goal and scored past Moger, after the goal, the United team improved but Skilton nearly scored twice more for Rangers. Just before half time, United had a chance when Billy Meredith played a ball on for Jimmy Turnbull, Charlie Roberts took the ball for United immediately afterwards and took it into the area, but was fouled with a penalty awarded

Arsenal F.C.
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Arsenal Football Club is a professional football club based in Highbury, London, that plays in the Premier League, the top flight of English football. The club has won 13 League titles,12 FA Cups, Arsenal was the first club from the South of England to join The Football League, in 1893. They entered the First Division in 1904, and have accumulated

3.
Arsenal's players and fans celebrate their 2004 League title win with an open-top bus parade.

4.
The North Bank Stand, Arsenal Stadium, Highbury

Sheffield Wednesday F.C.
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Sheffield Wednesday Football Club is a professional association football club based in Sheffield, England. The team competes in the Championship, the tier of the English football league system. Formed as an offshoot of The Wednesday Cricket Club in 1867, in 1868 they won the Cromwell Cup, only the second tournament of its kind, and in 1877 they won

1.
A cricket match at Darnall in the 1820s, a ground laid out for The Wednesday Cricket Club.

2.
Sheffield Wednesday

3.
The Wednesday squad shot from 1878, in their original hooped shirts.

Stamford Bridge (stadium)
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Stamford Bridge is a football stadium located in Fulham, London. It is the ground of Chelsea F. C. The stadium is located within the Moore Park Estate also known as Walham Green and is referred to as simply The Bridge. The capacity is 41,663, making it the eighth largest ground in the Premier League, the club has plans to expand the capacity to 60,

1.
Stamford Bridge

2.
Bird's Eye Picture of Chelsea's Stamford Bridge stadium in 1909

3.
The brand New Stamford Bridge stadium in August 1905

4.
Chelsea beat West Brom at Stamford Bridge in September 1905

FA Community Shield
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The Football Association Community Shield is English footballs annual match contested between the champions of the previous Premier League season and the holders of the FA Cup at Wembley Stadium. If the Premier League champions also won the FA Cup then the league runners-up provide the opposition, generally ranked below the FA Cup and League Cup in

1.
The trophy

Association football
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Association football, more commonly known as football or soccer, is a team sport played between two teams of eleven players with a spherical ball. It is played by 250 million players in over 200 countries and dependencies making it the worlds most popular sport, the game is played on a rectangular field with a goal at each end. The object of the ga

1.
The attacking player (No. 10) attempts to kick the ball beyond the opposing team's goalkeeper and between the goalposts and beneath the crossbar to score a goal

2.
Children playing cuju in Song dynasty China

3.
Ebenezer Cobb Morley, who is regarded as the "father of football"

4.
A women's international match between the United States and Germany

Gerrit Keizer
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Gerard Pieter Keizer, also known as Gerard Keyser, was a Dutch football goalkeeper. As well as being successful in his native country playing with AFC Ajax, he was also the original Flying Dutchman at Arsenal. Keizer joined Ajax Amsterdam at the age of 16, and two later made his debut for the side, against Stormvogels on April 1,1929. For the first

1.
Gerrit Keizer in 1946

Jimmy Seed
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James Marshall Jimmy Seed was an English footballer and football manager. Despite being born in Blackhill, Seed was brought up in the village of Whitburn on the coast just to the north of Sunderland, the family moving when Jimmy was only two years old. After scoring over 80 goals for Whitburn Jimmy had unsuccessful trials at South Shields, however

1.
Jimmy Seed

Harry Burgess (footballer)
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Harry Burgess was an English footballer who played at Inside-left for Stockport County, Sheffield Wednesday where he won the league championship in 1929–30, and Chelsea. He won four caps for England scoring four goals, Harry was born in Alderley Edge, Cheshire and played for Alderley Edge and Wilmslow Albion before appearing for Sandbach Ramblers i

1.
Harry Burgess

Ellis Rimmer
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Ellis Rimmer was a professional footballer who played for Tranmere Rovers, Sheffield Wednesday and Ipswich Town. He was a winger who was quite tall and scored his fair share of headed goals. His career lasted from 1924 until 1939 during which time he played 447 league games, scoring 142 goals and he was also a talented musician and often played pia

1.
Rimmer in 1926

1908 FA Charity Shield
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The 1908 FA Charity Shield was the first Charity Shield, a football match contested by the winners of the previous seasons Football League and Southern League competitions. The new match was arranged to take place at Chelsea F. C. s home ground. Following the conclusion of the leagues, 1907–08 Football League winners Manchester United were schedule

1.
Photo of the original hand written 'Laws of the game' for association Football drafted for and behalf of The Football Association by Ebenezer Cobb Morley in 1863 on display at the National Football Museum, Manchester.